Ethan Frome PreAP Multiple Choice Questions

ANSWER EACH QUESTION BY selecting THE CORRECT ANSWER AND providing AN EXPLANATION FOR EACH ANSWER. AN EXPLANATION MAY BE A DIRECT QUOTE FROM THE TEXT WITH A PAGE NUMBER, THE DEFINITION OF A LITERATRY TERM OR VOCABULARY WORD, A PARAPHRASE, ETC.

Questions 1-10: Use the passage from the Prologue beginning “Every one in Starkfield knew him and gave him a greeting tempered to his own grave mien…” and ending with “It was clear that the Varnum fortunes were at the ebb, but the two women did what they could…” to answer the following questions.

1. The narrator observes that the residents of Starkfield tend to greet Ethan Frome in what manner?

a. Warmly

b. Gravely

c. Coldly

d. Familiarly

e. Indifferently

2. As it is used in the passage, the word taciturn means

a. Talkative

b. Short-tempered

c. Reserved

d. long-lived

e. unfriendly

3. The passage suggests all of the following about Ethan except that he

a. Was once strong and hearty.

b. Had sandy-blonde hair.

c. Had a strong constitution.

d. Was a human wreck.

e. Is unhappily married.

4. When Harmon asserts, “Most of the smart ones get away,” he is implying that

a. Ethan is not one of “the smart ones.”

b. Starkfield winters are long and harsh.

c. Living in Starkfield is a last option.

d. Ethan tried to leave but had to return.

e. The smash-up kept Ethan in Starkfield.

5. The narrator confesses that Harmon’s supposition that Ethan had been in Starkfield for “too many winters” became the

a. Impetus for his desire to know Ethan’s story.

b. Central focus of all of his suppositions about Ethan.

c. Source of information about Ethan’s story.

d. Crux of Ethan’s story.

e. Narrator’s chief obsession.

6. The narrator suggests that all of the following were factors in the unfolding of Ethan Frome’s story except

a. Human decadence and apathy

b. Transportation technology

c. Communications technology

d. Weather and climate

e. Social opportunities

7. The narrator mentions his assignment at the powerhouse in Corbury Junction and the carpenters’ strike in order to

a. Emphasize the isolation of Starkfield.

b. Lend credibility to his role as narrator.

c. Establish the verisimilitude of his account.

d. Explain his presence in the town to learn the story.

e. Connect the tiny Starkfield with the broader community.

8. The narrator compares the long and harsh Starkfield winters to a

a. Hypnotic and satisfying routine.

b. Village of white tents.

c. Long, drawn-out siege.

d. Hungry company of surrendering soldiers.

e. An exodus away from the town.

9. How do Mrs. Hale and her house reflect the rest of the atmosphere of Starkfield?

a. Mrs. Hale and her house are both generally more refined than the rest of the village.

b. All are pale and evidently in dwindling fortunes.

c. The lawyer Varnum’s house was the “most considerable” mansion in the village.

d. Mrs. Hale is middle-aged and widowed.

e. The Varnum fortunes are “at the ebb”

10. The narrator’s pondering Harmon Gow’s statement, “Most of the smart ones get away,” ultimately leads him to wonder

a. Why Ethan was not “smart” enough to leave.

b. What role the Starkfield climate played.

c. Who left, who stayed and why.

d. How did Ethan Frome come to be in his current circumstances.

e. What tragic combination of forces kept Ethan in Starkfield.

Questions 11-15: Use the passage from the Prologue beginning “Abreast of the schoolhouse the road forked, and we dipped down a lane to the left…” and ending with the line “The biter cold and the heavy going nearly knocked the wind out of me…” to answer the following questions.

11. The imagery of the first paragraph emphasizes all of the following except

a. The isolation of Ethan’s home and mill.

b. The severity of the climate.

c. The Frome’s poverty.

d. Ethan’s reticence.

e. The ugliness of the setting.

12. How does Ethan’s house symbolize his life and circumstances?

a. Both are diminishing.

b. Part of the house had to be torn down.

c. Both are described as “forlorn and stunted” looking.

d. The living center of the house has been torn down.

13. Ethan explains to the narrator that his mother’s decline and death were accelerated by

a. Rheumatism.

b. Lack of exercise.

c. Anger.

d. Isolation and loneliness.

e. Depression.

14. To the narrator, the lowering of Ethan’s “veil of reticence” is a contrast to Ethan’s

a. Usual quietness.

b. Shabby and isolated house.

c. Wrecked and crooked appearance.

d. Talk of his mother’s illness.

e. Somber demeanor.

15. The storm’s increasing intensity serves as a vehicle to

a. Get the narrator into Ethan’s house.

b. Establish Ethan’s silence.

c. Emphasize Starkfield’s weather.

d. Explain Ethan’s backstory.

e. Introduce the inciting incident.